I Wonder Why This Number Is Rising So...
Politics3 mins ago
hopefully someone can help me understand this, my french lecturer couldn't.
So for the definite, you say:
le chat brun (the brown cat)
and the plural is les chats bruns (the brown cats)
And the indefinte is:
un chats bruns (the brown cat)
and the plural is
des bruns chats (????????)
What is the situation where a plural indefinite is used?
There isn't such in english, a plural is always definite.
Thanks for any advice
No best answer has yet been selected by dash_zero. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I'm not sure what you mean - we DO have the indefinite in English. Definite article = the; indefinite = a/an in the singular and is either omitted or replaced with the word "some" in the plural:
le chat brun = THE brown cat
les chats bruns = THE brown cats
UN chat brun = A brown cat
DES chats bruns = brown cats or SOME brown cats - you either leave off the article completely or replace it with "some". Or were you worried about the word order? Sorry if I've completely missed your point!
No I agree with dash zero - it aint that simple.
I could never get the difference between
transport d'enfants - which was on the side of a bus - an autobus I think, and....
transport des enfants - which wasnt anywhere, and isnt what the Froggies would say.....
anyway - with an adjective in front of the noun, as in un brun chat, isnt the plural de bruns chats?
skools 6-10 in france are called ecoles de grammaire, and you can see why.....
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